They Mocked The Navy Chief On The Mat. Then Her Real Orders Came Out-eirian

A room full of black-belt Marines laughed at me, called me a secretary, and dared me to step onto the mat.

Ten minutes later, not one of them was laughing.

By the time they learned who I really was, the toughest fighter in the building was staring at the floor, wondering how he had ended up there.

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The gates of Camp Lejeune rolled open at 6:15 a.m. on a humid Monday morning.

The kind of humidity that makes your collar stick before the day has even started.

The air smelled like diesel, saltwater, wet asphalt, and burned coffee from the duty van parked by the checkpoint.

I stepped through carrying three things.

A sealed manila folder.

A battered leather notebook.

And years of experience I had no intention of advertising.

The military police officer at the checkpoint took my orders through the window and glanced at the top page.

“Joint Tactical Combat Training Center?” he asked.

“Yes.”

He looked from the paper to my uniform.

Standard Navy khakis.

No flashy ribbons.

No special insignia.

Nothing on the surface that explained why I had been sent there before most people had finished their first cup of coffee.

“Have a good day, Chief,” he said.

“Thank you.”

Exactly.

Just another Chief.

That was what I needed everyone to believe.

Twenty-six minutes later, I stood outside Building 12 with the notebook under my arm and sweat gathering at the back of my collar.

A brass plaque beside the door identified it as the Joint Tactical Combat Training Center.

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